S
sdeco
Guest
I have an unusual situation that’s kind of hard to explain, but I’ll try. It will probably be easier for people with knowledge of NFP to understand.
My husband and I use NFP. My menstrual cycles are extremely long and extremely irregular, ranging from about 50 days to 80 days. Most women with cycles this long don’t ovulate, but I ovulate in every cycle, because in every cycle I’ve charted my temperature has gone up, indicating ovulation, even in my 80 day cycles. I even got pregnant (unexpectedly) a couple years ago and have a 2-year-old daughter.
I go to an NFP-only doctor who prescribed me Provera to induce my period during a particularly long cycle. For those of you that don’t know, Provera is a medication that makes a woman get her period. It doesn’t make her ovulate.
I often have long periods of confusing fertility signs, and I’m really, really tired of them. Sometimes I honestly don’t know if I’ll ovulate tomorrow or a month from now, because my cycles are so irregular and my mucus signs are not always clear for a good portion of the cycle.
I’m thinking about just taking Provera at regular intervals to make my cycles regular. I would take it at the same time every cycle so that I would have a period every month or every couple of months. It seems to me like this would basically prevent me from ovulating at all, since when I ovulate it’s always much later in the cycle. For those of you familiar with NFP, it would be like going straight from phase 1 to phase 3 and skipping phase 2. Therefore, would it be “birth control?” Or is it ok since I’m making my body do what it’s supposed to do anyway?
I get my period naturally about 6 times a year, and I ovulate every time, but leading up to ovulation is always a long period of confusing signs, abstinence and frustration. A woman should get her period at least 4 times a year, otherwise she’s at risk for endometrial cancer. I get it about 6 times, not as much as I should but I think from a health perspective it’s ok. I admit my main motivation is making NFP easier, since my cycles would be predictable and I would bypass the time of my cycle that’s very confusing. We are trying to avoid pregnancy right now, btw.
I hope this makes sense. Maybe I’m just being scrupulous. Let me know what you think. Thanks.
My husband and I use NFP. My menstrual cycles are extremely long and extremely irregular, ranging from about 50 days to 80 days. Most women with cycles this long don’t ovulate, but I ovulate in every cycle, because in every cycle I’ve charted my temperature has gone up, indicating ovulation, even in my 80 day cycles. I even got pregnant (unexpectedly) a couple years ago and have a 2-year-old daughter.
I go to an NFP-only doctor who prescribed me Provera to induce my period during a particularly long cycle. For those of you that don’t know, Provera is a medication that makes a woman get her period. It doesn’t make her ovulate.
I often have long periods of confusing fertility signs, and I’m really, really tired of them. Sometimes I honestly don’t know if I’ll ovulate tomorrow or a month from now, because my cycles are so irregular and my mucus signs are not always clear for a good portion of the cycle.
I’m thinking about just taking Provera at regular intervals to make my cycles regular. I would take it at the same time every cycle so that I would have a period every month or every couple of months. It seems to me like this would basically prevent me from ovulating at all, since when I ovulate it’s always much later in the cycle. For those of you familiar with NFP, it would be like going straight from phase 1 to phase 3 and skipping phase 2. Therefore, would it be “birth control?” Or is it ok since I’m making my body do what it’s supposed to do anyway?
I get my period naturally about 6 times a year, and I ovulate every time, but leading up to ovulation is always a long period of confusing signs, abstinence and frustration. A woman should get her period at least 4 times a year, otherwise she’s at risk for endometrial cancer. I get it about 6 times, not as much as I should but I think from a health perspective it’s ok. I admit my main motivation is making NFP easier, since my cycles would be predictable and I would bypass the time of my cycle that’s very confusing. We are trying to avoid pregnancy right now, btw.
I hope this makes sense. Maybe I’m just being scrupulous. Let me know what you think. Thanks.